PhotoVoice
November 10, 2008 by Lesli Jason
Filed under Digital Lifestyles, Media, Photography, Top
It is well established that if you give someone a fish, they’ll have dinner for one night. Teach someone to fish and they’ll have dinner for the rest of their life.
In 1998, Edinburgh University Social Anthropology students Tiffany Fairey and Anna Blackman established two projects which sought to integrate participatory photography into their MA dissertations. These projects, the Rose Class project in Nepal and the Street Vision project in Vietnam, encouraged and inspired refugees from these areas to capture their everyday lives on film, with cameras supplied by the two projects. Read more
Photojojo can set your creativity free
November 3, 2008 by Britt Stokes
Filed under Digital Lifestyles, Media, Photography, The Not-So-Daily Edition, Top
No kitsch here. Photojojo.com is an original, exciting breath of fresh air. The slightly irreverent tenor and decidedly different ideas and photo projects make this site required reading for photographers and other artists in general.
Profile: Bret Taylor
October 15, 2008 by madBADcat
Filed under Digital Lifestyles, Profiles, Top
Madbadcat’s Note: By his own admission, Brett Taylor is largely self-taught. I would tend to argue that, as artists, we are all "largely self-taught", exploring new territory each time we approach a subject. His passion for painting may come from finding TEXTURE as a new addition to his visual vocabulary. Chek out the texture on this closeup of one of his paintings.
Digital Infrared Photography by Cyrill Harnischmacher
October 6, 2008 by Dr. Michael N. Roach
Filed under Books, Photography, Software, Top, Workflow
One of my colleagues is an architectural photographer who shoots digital infrared images a great deal of the time. Unfortunately, he lives several hundred miles from me and when we are together (which actually is seldom) we spend our time talking about our lives and clients–and lately, hurricanes (since we both live in areas that are affected by storms). That means that we don’t spend a lot of time talking about infrared photography, which I would really like to do. For me, that’s unfortunate because I am actually very interested in the “look” of the infrared photograph, and years ago in my film days I actually spent some time experimenting with black and white infrared film and the appropriate filters. So the theory is not unknown to me, but the practical aspects of digital infrared photography is very new to me. Read more
LAYERS: The Complete Guide To Photoshop’s Most Powerful Feature
June 23, 2008 by Dr. Michael N. Roach
Filed under Books, Featured Stories, Graphics, Photography, Software
When I pick up a book to read it I have an almost overwhelming desire to know something about the person writing the book before I even flip the pages of that book. I want a connection between that person and myself in order to justify committing myself to their momentary care. I look first at book forwards or introductions or at least the author’s brief inside the front cover. This is true whether the book is a work of fiction or a technical manual. Without this beginning I have a hard time relating myself to the author; I have this need to know something about them.
Some almost 50 years ago when I was a beginning college student I always avoided classes taught by "staff" or "to be announced" if there was an option, and when there was a name listed for a course I got out my college catalogue and looked up the faculty member teaching the course and tried to find out as much about them as possible before I committed myself and my hard-earned tuition money to their care.
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Whatever Happened To The “Decisive Moment”?
June 9, 2008 by Jan Anderson-Paxson
Filed under Editor's Choice, Photography
Photography has been evolving constantly from its birth in 1839. There have been many different kinds of photographs and processes through the years, including the daguerreotype, calotype, ambrotype, tintype, prints from sheet film, prints from roll film, and now images from digital capture. Each process had its advantages and disadvantages but most of us would agree that generally advances in technology have made life easier and better. But in this “Instantaneous, quantity over quality, throw-away world,” have we also lost the ability to think? Read more
Seven Key Techniques For Taking Your Images From Flat To Fantastic
June 2, 2008 by Dr. Michael N. Roach
Filed under Books, Editor's Choice, Photography, Workflow
I included the sub-title with the title because I think it makes the subject clearer. I think that describes why Scott Kelby’s book is not just another Photoshop book even if you don’t know who Scott Kelby actually is. If you don’t know, then I suggest you crank up GOOGLE and pick a couple of dozen of the 999,000 entries it says it pinged up for your perusal when you punch in his name. I’ll give you the summation—he knows Photoshop. He knows it very well! Read more
The Nikon D3
May 26, 2008 by Britt Stokes
Filed under Commerce, Digital Lifestyles, Featured Stories, Hardware, Photography, Workflow
I was always an F kind of guy. My first Nikon pro camera was the original F - a 1971 black body FTN. It supplemented my FM2 and I had it until just a couple of years ago when I sold it to a close friend, who bought it with the understanding that I might occasionally need to fondle it… call it conjugal visits.
A few years later I found a really nice F2 that I still have… I skipped the F3 and F4 entirely Read more
EXPLORING DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY & GROUP THERAPY, TOGETHER
May 19, 2008 by Beckett Gilchrist
Filed under Digital Lifestyles, Featured Stories, Photography
When I studied traditional photography over twenty years ago I did not see how much the art would shift for me in the way I executed it and what it meant for me. I believed like many of us that the silver halide was a thing of exacting beauty that could never be replaced. Read more
Exposure & Lighting for Digital Photographers Only
April 25, 2008 by Dr. Michael N. Roach
Filed under Books, Digital Lifestyles, Featured Stories, Photography, Workflow
I recently encountered a relatively new book by Michael Meadhra and Charlotte K. Lowrie entitled Exposure and Lighting for Digital Photographers Only published by Wiley Press in 2007. Read more






